Juan M Taboas

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MS, PhD

Associate Professor

Biography

Dr. Taboas’ expertise is in skeletal tissue regeneration, stem cell mechanobiology, tissue engineering scaffolds, microfluidics devices, and real-time live-cell microscopy based functional bioassays. His laboratory develops approaches to regenerate cartilaginous interfacial tissues. These include the physis (epiphyseal growth plate), the mandibular condyle fibrocartilage, tendon and ligament insertion sites (entheses), the tide mark in articular cartilage, and the vertebral endplates. Cartilaginous interfaces share a common architectural feature: spatially discrete but proximate populations of chondrocytes at distinct states of differentiation. The physis is the cartilaginous interfacial tissue at the ends of limb bones that drives appendicular skeletal growth. No clinical approach exists to restore growth at the physis; it is a good model for cartilaginous interface tissue regeneration because it has chondrocytes at all stages of endochondral ossification, a process of coordinated cellular progression through all states with progenitors supplying new cells into the cycle at one end. The laboratory also collaborates with several PIs in the CCR to regenerate other skeletal and craniofacial tissues. Current research interests: